No, it is a noun. The adjective form is absent.
The noun absence has the verb and adjective form absent. The related adverb form is absently, which, however, has a connotation beyond simple absence: it suggests inattentiveness, absent-mindedness.
Abstract noun forms for the adjective absent are absence, absentee, and absenteeism.
I will not tolerate another absence from my class!
In the absence of credible evidence, the judge dropped the case. Due to the absence of the teacher, a substitute was called.
I felt an absence in my heart when my dog died.
We usually use this adjective with the verb to be: He was absent yesterday. Meaning that he sould have been there but was not. Also, we can use absent as a verb. He absented himself from the tiring gossip.
The noun absence has the verb and adjective form absent. The related adverb form is absently, which, however, has a connotation beyond simple absence: it suggests inattentiveness, absent-mindedness.
The abstract noun form for the adjective absent is absence.
The noun form for the verb absent is the gerund, absenting.The noun form for the adjective absent is absenteeism.A related noun form is absence.
As an adjective, abessive means "of of relating to the grammatical case which indicates absence".
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'silent' is silentness, a word for a quality of absence of sound; a word for a concept.The related concrete noun form of the adjective 'silent' is silence, a word for the physical state of absence of sound.
The correct spelling of the noun is absence (state of non-attendance). The adjective is absent.
The word 'calm' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for the absence of disturbance, the absence of wind, tranquility. The noun form for the adjective 'calm' is calmness.
Yes, it is. It is a characteristic color, or an absence of light. The color itself may be a noun or pronoun.
Abstract noun forms for the adjective absent are absence, absentee, and absenteeism.
No. It is a noun. There is an adverb form of the adjective absent, which is absently, but it has an entirely different connotation (inattentively, in a preoccupied or peripheral manner).
Yes, the noun 'silence' is a concrete noun, a word for the physical state of absence of sound.